4.8 Article

Taste cell-expressed α-glucosidase enzymes contribute to gustatory responses to disaccharides

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1520843113

Keywords

gustation; sensory transduction; disaccharides; sucrase-isomaltase; maltase-glucoamylase

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health-National Institution on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIH-NIDCD) [R01DC03155, R01DC014105]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [KAKENHI 15H02571, 26670810, 15K11044, 25.4608]
  3. NIH-NIDCD Core Grant [P30DC011735]
  4. National Science Foundation [DBI-0216310]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K11044, 15H02571, 26670810] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The primary sweet sensor in mammalian taste cells for sugars and noncaloric sweeteners is the heteromeric combination of type 1 taste receptors 2 and 3 (T1R2+ T1R3, encoded by Tas1r2 and Tas1r3 genes). However, in the absence of T1R2+ T1R3 (e. g., in Tas1r3 KO mice), animals still respond to sugars, arguing for the presence of T1R-independent detection mechanism(s). Our previous findings that several glucose transporters (GLUTs), sodium glucose cotransporter 1 (SGLT1), and the ATP-gated K+ (K-ATP) metabolic sensor are preferentially expressed in the same taste cells with T1R3 provides a potential explanation for the T1R-independent detection of sugars: sweet-responsive taste cells that respond to sugars and sweeteners may contain a T1R-dependent (T1R2+ T1R3) sweet-sensing pathway for detecting sugars and noncaloric sweeteners, as well as a T1R-independent (GLUTs, SGLT1, K-ATP) pathway for detecting monosaccharides. However, the T1R-independent pathway would not explain responses to disaccharide and oligomeric sugars, such as sucrose, maltose, and maltotriose, which are not substrates for GLUTs or SGLT1. Using RT-PCR, quantitative PCR, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry, we found that taste cells express multiple alpha-glycosidases (e. g., amylase and neutral a glucosidase C) and so-called intestinal brush border disaccharide-hydrolyzing enzymes (e. g., maltase-glucoamylase and sucrase-isomaltase). Treating the tongue with inhibitors of disaccharidases specifically decreased gustatory nerve responses to disaccharides, but not to monosaccharides or noncaloric sweeteners, indicating that lingual disaccharidases are functional. These taste cell-expressed enzymes may locally break down dietary disaccharides and starch hydrolysis products into monosaccharides that could serve as substrates for the T1R-independent sugar sensing pathways.

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